Best Western Ipswich

Stay at this centrally located Ipswich motel, within walking distance of hospitals, show grounds, the University of Queensland Ipswich and the city centre. They are a 15 minute drive to Willowbank Raceway and Amberley Air Force Base and are set in peaceful surroundings with delightful sub-tropical gardens.

They offer you fresh, spotlessly clean motel rooms, self-catering apartments, and friendly hospitality. Choose from executive rooms, self-catering one or two bedroom family apartments, or three-bedroom self-contained cottages. All suites are luxurious, large and airy. The fresh, comfortable interiors have been renovated several times, and the road-facing windows have all been double-glazed so that traffic noise, once a problem, is an issue no more.

There is an excellent restaurant and piano bar on-site. The Heritage has an extensive menu and caters for most tastes. The meals are traditional fare, featuring old favourites like potato and leek soup, oysters kilpatrick, rib-eye steaks, chicken parmigiana, sticky date pudding to name a few.

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Our rooms

They have two freestanding three-bedroom houses on the property grounds. Each house contains a full kitchen, three bedrooms, open plan living/dining areas, and each has been refurbished and modernised within the last few years.

Their standard rooms are well-appointed and comfortable, having all been renovated within the last few years, and contain a queen bed and a single bed. Double-glazed windows insulate them from traffic noise. They contain a flat screen LCD television, a desk and chairs, a small refrigerator as well as tea and coffee making facilities. There is also a hairdryer. The rooms feature good quality carpet underfoot, and there are full blockout curtains to keep the sun at bay in the mornings, and reverse-cycle split-system air conditioning to keep the temperature at your desired level.

Superior Queen rooms feature a queen bed, a two-seater sofa and a dining setting for two. There is a large (40 inch) LCD television. Double glazing is unnecessary because the rooms are well away from the road. These rooms contain the same facilities (tea and coffee making, refrigerator, air conditioning, hair dryer) as the standard rooms.

Each of these rooms has a kitchenette with two-burner cooktop, microwave oven, refrigerator, cutlery and crockery. There is a separate bedroom containing a queen bed. The open plan living/dining area contains comfortable furnishings and a large (40 inch) LCD television.

Old fashioned values and friendly townsfolk are the hallmarks of Baralaba. Those traits and a stubborn streak for sticking around. More than a century of economic upheaval has threatened the town on many an occasion, but Baralaba locals are a stoic lot.

Located one kilometre east of Moura on the Dawson Highway, the 150th Meridian marker shows the position of the imaginary line (150 °E) on which Queensland (Eastern Standard) time is based.
At the time of the equinox, a day is exactly 12 hours long anywhere on the Meridian line.

The northern most town in the Banana region, Dululu is a junction point that divides the two southern arterials, Burnett Highway (A3) to the east and the Leichhardt Highway (A5) to the west.
Both highways reveal untold adventures and this rural village is the start of them all – a launching pad to the region and perfect place to stop, rest and make your touring plans.

In its heyday, Wowan was the dairy capital of the region. With more than 600 farmers on the job, the Dawson Valley Dairy Cooperative was topped up daily with fresh supplies of full cream milk, ready to ship off to towns and cities as far away as England.

Duaringa is located 107 kilometres west of Rockhampton along the Capricorn Highway. The small town is the essence of a small rural community.
Duaringa is the oldest township in Duaringa Shire with buildings dating back to the 1860s and a corner of the local hotel has been preserved to show how early pioneers lived.

Goovigen is a small rural village in the region’s northern farming heartland. A short distance north-west of Jambin off the Burnett Highway, fewer than 300 people live in the town.
The streets of Goovigen are as neat as a pin and the heritage buildings have been either restored to their former glory or updated for present needs.

Mount Morgan is an historical mining town nestled on the Dee River a short 38 kilometre drive from Rockhampton. The town is rich in nineteenth century Queensland colonial history and has artefacts and relics from the gold rush days that visitors can experience.

A rural hub with a pub to service weary travellers, Jambin is on the Burnett Highway just south of Smoky Creek. Part of the Callide Valley, the town is wedged between the Callide Creek to the west and the highway to the east, making it a picturesque spot to stop.

Moura is a central point and vibrant community for the people who serve its local industries – the farmers, growers and miners and their families that help to make Queensland great.
Lying in the heart of the Dawson Valley, not far from the Dawson River, its parklands and public facilities, festivals and events, river fishing and water sports attract thousands of visitors each year.

Theodore is located on the Dawson River 105 kilometres south west of Biloela.
From its earliest days, Theodore was a stopping point for travellers and the same is true today.
A pretty place, Theodore is shaped like a point between the Dawson River and Castle Creek, its palm lined streets give a tropical feel to the place.

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Note: Information on listed products and services are provided by the operator and were correct at the time of publishing. Rates are indicative based on the minimum and maximum available prices of products and services. Please visit the operator’s website for further information. All prices quoted are in Australian dollars (AUD).